f. I ??J SYRUP IS i* LAXATIVE | ? J When baby Is constlL has wind-colic, feverish breath, pd-tongne. or diarrhea, a half-teaLjjful of genuine "California Fig Up" promptly moves the poisons, Li, bile, souring food and waste [t out. Never gramps or overacts. Ls love Its delicious taste. your druggist for genuine "CalDla Klg Syrup" which has full dljons for infails In arms, and chll, of all ages, plainly printed on ie. Always sifr "California" or may get an limitation flg syrup. Astute Child w isv sliotfld we learn gram'S.i wo caii correct ouj^ papas Man to Man Hi sii;!1"-'- yore boss, now that ilauLl.itjr'S still home." 'v ?n ! 'efliectlve action. Dr. 4 \ Shot j* !has no equal. A K j .,,, , ?r.< . utj Wforms or Tapeworm. ^hn Pa Knows - ?!.at you get and bragging u: | _ __ i.l'eyed inireaseth light; light HlLEN'S foot-ease r For Tirod Fast It Can't Ba Baat At plght when your feet I ftai are tlrett. sore and ewollen I ^J|iif3'ru,"i touch walking or I I kSlilMt T dancjing, sprinkle two ALLEN S FOOT-EASE powders -f in Ijhe fiMit-bath, gently I A rub the sore and lnBX \ /jffrYf.' flamed parts and \ Vh\A3\ rel'ef ,s llk* ma*,cy \ V/V-T klaa's Fast-Ease uf \f tX Into your sboes in I L \LJr ttla morning and JdvW walk in comfort. It 1 takes the friction ^Kom the shoe. Soldevery where. ForflEt Hample ard a Foot-Ease Walking Doll, ALLEYS FOOT-EASE. U Ur. I t KYES HUM? t lcnorr ibe daagrr BizruUa J^HRUk sdunr cyr?,red lids, bk** I ^Bot eyeball*. Mlte^l | ^Rye SbIvb remorw irrite- f ^ ^Of | ^Bon. reduce? inflAmmAtJe?. 1 P - / I \ \ I iili k irrcm / I *\ /\ \ | H|7 Warg.-.'yPI .Yew Tcrk / I \ ^ BARS UNCLES Carbon draws out the core and gives quick relief | CARBOIL W GENEROUS SOt BOX ^^^^B At All r>rii AO iff. /*- sn# w H "wvirx'Wui,* cd. . t?nn. "" [want Tt) IIK.tR FROM OWNER | I r:' 1 farm or fano^i f?>r sale. L.' A. | 'Irani Junction, Mich. KENTUCKY HOG FARMS ^B?l-rr ' liur'-r-k Jersey, H!g Type Poland ' S; Poland China Hog,. Buy Bar Mt,rtyaKo I.ifA-rs In the Bltie. Grass. u? jr waits. | KENTUCKY HOG H*^l' I.-xinicton.i Kentucky. BAl-liKKM' stVKS YOUR HEALTH. ? ar..l ..M. tudow?jrs. ^ox 781. Dallas. Tex. | ^P*\'ru,!,c discovert not known before. rUt, "" *n>UMlnk pastime. Free sample. f,'<: w. JeffeTeon. Detroit. Mich. Eczema Can Be Relieved R;,^ fromj thi* or any othar skin I *' wi:i' u^on reQU?at. aand yon a I dermanolIL "Ml day, trial, 'if y<>u are Batlsfled with K d;r7u'>' H'*nd Ka Si.00. but If no benefit K, '4 r*>um th? unused ointment ?nd ^ Ji' n"'hln*. Write todmy. Rio, <- 5(,VAI- laboratories Motion yictrolt. Mich. tor MaVATEE; C OUNTY" FARMS Hl-r * *"<1 sultry raising, ?lTt to *H0 Bl b..j. 'j ,,n i,Rln Highway near City. | H?U - 't "rn<,; ***nd for| circular. Dissell Sc ?1 Realtors. Bradentown. Florida. I Ec y u ?An attachment mak <*lti'n fountaln P?n. Amenta' propI Hfor ntia order. One for nickel, six I mi:i i i'?T , Satisfaction guaranteed. Mc/' ,l0* 3(7 01. Clearwater, Florida. | ?c>,,i)0rtunity. Patented machinery I 111 inv. t iri, Values possible 1st yr. per I Mp&rti??r. royhlty Income interests. For a'ars add Pkuly, 1321 K. Waah., D/C. ^ DA ncFr>T>tn """"1 - m mm ii ? -V a flX%AXJR> 0 hair bal-sam I I Hftafcr Rem#re? Dandruff-Stop# Hair Faflfa* I rkVt J RortoroaCoUr mmd I 1 f^rSm rH Beantr to Gray and FnUd Half Rl^ct^Vwk.*'ttS'i.N.T. indercorns Remark Oora. 0*1H >D> oomfort to the w'~t: : I Earn a Genuine I Underwood Typewriter ^R*rh us 'nanie? of prospective typeI "r I'UytTs?4we circularise them? . ''uy trachlpee at our speolat pride, I pt,,.?,''1 your pick of several models H . prepaid. Write for offers. EaU Box J 3701, Clearwater, Pla. I W- N. U? ATLANTA, No. 25-1926. ' ,"1 v v V,.>v \* < Rural An Holds So-Called "Declining" Villages Rival Biggest Cities in Rate of Growth. a New York.?Contrary to thffT>revallIng notion that rural America is losing ground against the city, the Institute of Social and Religious Re search has analyzed hitherto unpublished census data which cut the rate of city Increase, 1900 to 1920 frotu ?. ? l . . _ per cent to 02.1 per cent ana actually pushes the rural rate of growth up to 20.7 per cent. The* facti are brought out by Robert W. McCulloch In a recent Issue of The Survey. One explanation lies In the government's bookkeeping; when a village reaches 2,500 people it automatically becomes a city according to census categories, and without moving an ljnch from their own dooryards its villagers get Into the urbjtn column. Evpn so, between 1900 and 1920, the villages In this country with 250 and 2,1^00 Inhabitants Increased 5,674 In number. To quote In advance from Mr. McCulloch: "The recejnt report of the National Industrial Conference board showing that radical tendencies have shifted from the industrial workers to the farmers, is dnly one of many warnings that have reused Interest In the rural situation and caused an Increasing demand for mcts about the country's rural people. "The peop e of the industrial centers have been studied from every viewpoint. About the rural folk, there Is an astonis^ii ig dearth of trustworthy Information. More than this, a study by the Instl ute of Social and Religious Researei, some of the results of which are now available, indicates that actual Misinformation concerning rural conditions is very general. "It is belie ved, even by the experts, that the fu-a! areas of the United States are biing depleted by a great, nationwide \iitlgratlon of country folk to the cities. In support of this, stories of the decline of America's villages are ci/culated wVth disheartening frequency. "But is tie cityward migration so great an^, so menacing a population movement alter all? And are American villages really declining? "Decllne'JJs Explained. "If one turns to the .census, one is impressed by the relentless decline In relative Importance of the rural "element of the population from decade to decade. As recently as 1880 only 28.6 ner Pent nf America's total DODUlatlon lived in Incorporated places having 2,500 or more, the boundary line between 'rural' and 'urban' as defined by the census. In other words, 71.4 per cent of all Americans were. In 1880, rural folk. In 1920 this proportion had dropped to 48.6 per cent. "Even if tt ere were no movement to the cities, tl ere would still be, from one census period to the next, a steady decrease In tlie number of people classified as 'rura because this Is a growing nation, and many places classified as rural at the end of one decade grow sufficte ltly to cross Into the urban class by the time the next census Is taken. "In Alabama, for example, Alabama City, a_ village with 2,276 Inhabitants in 1900, passed into the urban class in 1910 with a population of 4,313; and Andalusia City, with 551 In 1900 and 2,480 In 1910, got over the line with 4,023 in 1920. "Here theii we see how some thousands of people in two villages ceased to be villagers and became urban folk; not by migration cityward, but by a process of governmental bookkeeping that did dot -nove a single villager out of his own dooryard. Whiit Figures Show. "The Inst tute of Social and Religious Resei rch got returns from the villages of til the states. These figures show that between 1900 and 1910, 47C places vhich Wfa been classified as rural In 1!MX), passed the 2,500 mark and entered the urban class; while during the n ?xt decade, the number of places that bassed from the rural to the urban class was 474. In addition, 118 places in the earlier decade and 72 in the last, entered the urban ranks because they became Incorporated. It Is the censuq procedure to classify unincorporated! places as rural no matter what their size. "The institute compiled a special tabulation showing the growth In population since 1900 of the territory that was urban and of the territory that was rural In that year. This was done to eliminate! the confusion due to the constant shift of villages to the urban class. New j England was eliminated from this jcalculatlon because the township foj-m of government makes It difficult jo divide the population Into groups comparable with the urban and rural groups In other sections, but for the rest of the United States, BUGS STUDIED IN tup ppiriri 1* A si s a a va? o Visit Arid Southwestern America to Collect Insects Thj|t Prey on Pest 1 I Uvalde. Tjexas.?The prickly pear cactus is advancing In Australia at the rate of a million acres a year. Lelth F. Hitchcock of the Australian commonwealth prickly pear board estimates that already 60,000,000 acres of east Australia alone are Infested with this spiny pest. Mr. Hltctnjock has Just arrived here at the field station of the United States bureau of eptomology to take charge of the North American phase of Australia's war Ion the prickly plant. So Vtn/llo has tho partus taken to the ClI mate of the Isolated continent that It occupies more than twice as much land as all the other crops put together, and so desperate have the inhabitants become that every sort of enemy that ^he cactus ever had in any 1 * -1. ... .. ' \erica * (X Its Ownii K Oi this special tabulation showed that II 4,620,055 rural people became city folk cl between 1900 and 1920, not becauso e: they migrated but because the places U In which tbey had been living grew sufficiently to be lifted from the rural n into the urban class. ci "The institute's report of this study, tl 'American Villager*.' written by Dr. fi C. Luther Fry, shows that with the tl differences In classification eliminated, n the rural Increase becomes 23.6 per ti AAn?. I -K ?- 4-1 ? ' *? 0 * v-cui, niiuu is um uuriuai iuureuse ui n births over deaths and nearly twice a as large as the Increase based upon the ^ ordinary census figures. When, gi for purposes of comparison, the R growth of cities between 1000 and a 1820 is limited solely to the places that t< were cities In 1900 the rate of growth le for the period Is 66.4 per cent Instead ti of 84.0. S "This rate of actual growth for the tl places that were cities In 1900 needs a further correction. c< Explains City Growth. w "In 1020 there were 13,920,692 for- g] elgn-born people living In the United t< States. Of this number 10,500,942 0i lived In cities, while only 3,419,750 re- b< shied Ih rnrnl flrpns Of thpse 10 500.- H 9412 urban aliens, 5,478,989 are known to have entered the country after g 1900, while only 1,416,106 of the lmml- g grants In rural areas fall Into this a group. The fact that during the S last twenty years 4,000,000 more im- w migrants settled In our urban areas si than In our rural areas helps explain tl the relatively rapid growth of cities, p When corrected for this factor, the d rate of city increase drops still fur- t( ther?from 66.4 per cent to 52.1 per si cent, and the rural rate of growth, tl corrected In like manner, becomes 20.7 bi per cent. o: "The Institute devoted particular at- ei tention to the questlou of the growth and decline of villages. In 1920 there were 10,239 Incorporated villages, with w a population of 8,509,659; and In rela- p tlon to the population of the remain- ir lng rural area they are growing very w rapidly Indeed. hi "From 1900 to 1920 the Incorporated a villages Increased 41 per cent, both In ci number and In population. During the p same period the population of the tl United States as a whole Increased 39 t< per cent. During these twenty years, therefore, Incorporated villages In- It creased In population more rapidly a il A.X 1 a.i i t _ rv man ine uanuu as a wnoie. ? "Despite the fact that nearly a thou- si sand Incorporated villages, with all 1' the people who dwelt In them, were li lost from the rural classification be- li cause th?jy grew Into the city class, r the number of villages increased 5,674 tl from 1900 to 1920. [Thousands of little tl open-country population centers, there- p fore, became vlllageb as a result of w actual Increase In open-country population ; and their growth, by sending c them Into the village class, checked n them out as a loss to the open country h In this analysis of open-country and tl village populations^ -f g Village (SVBWth.-^ < a "To find out whether the village In- tl crease In population might be ex- gi plained by this Increase In the number p of places classed as villages, the In- n stltute worked out the rate of growth c since 1900 of all the places that In 1900 li were Incorporated villages. This com- g putatlon revealed tltat the places that a were Incorporated villages In 1900 p grew 51.3 per cent during the next tl New Air Mail Can Mayor George E. Cryer of Los Ai James J. Walker of New York, which wi air mqll from the southern California ell regui -r air mall at Salt Lake City, Utah, by ah all. wrw% t | h rltitl 1 U1N Y PEAR CACTUS rr a: part of the yorld Is being drafted Into service In the wild hope that It will help check Its spread. n For that purpose the Australian prickly pear board has sent out men (t to the arid regions or tne aoumweat h to collect specimens of the various j' types of Insects that prey on the prickly pear. Thus far, according to Mr. Hitchcock, different species of the ' mealy bugs or cochineal Insects have a been found most successful. The In- n sects are grown In cages at the ento- e| mological station here and the most vicious attackers of the cactus are shipped to Australia. There the au- w thorllles, taking warning from the rapid Increase of the artificially Introduced rabbit and the cactus itself, grow the Insects In quarantine through ei at least one generation before they tl turn them loose to do their worst o: : ; JJ A wrinkle la merely a nick of time. M > _ 1 ( lAVac eve W; trs ?? / NEWS, TRYON, N. C. - vehty years, compared with a 63 per mt Increase for places that In 1900 ere cities of 100,000 and over; 91 er cent for cities of 25,000 to 100.30; 67 per cent for cities from 10,000 > 25,000 ; 69 per-cent for places of om 2,500 to 10,000, and 19.5 per cent >r the open country. Here is the.Investing discovery, not only that the reatest rate of growth since 1900 has ccurred in cities of from 25,000 to 30,000, instead of in metropolitan Itles; but that the villages have been tpandlng almost as rapidly as the irge metropolitan centers. "The census gathers at great cost a lass of facts about the residents of lnnrporated villages, covering occupa on, age, sex, nationality, tenure of irm, home ownership, marital condlon and school attendance. All this laterlaUlles In the census flies vlraalfy unused, because no provision as ever been made for lta analysis nd publication. "Through the courtesy of the cen as bureau, the Institute of Social and :ellglous Research was able to raakh special study of this unpublished ma rlal for 177 villages which were setcted as representative of the agrlcullral villages of the entire United tates, and which had a total populaon of a quarter of a million. "A phase of this study helps to aciunt for both villageward and cltyard migration by showing that an untllled worker who goes from the farm ) the village, or from either the farm r the village to the city, Improves oth his social and his economic poslon. "The census method of classifying sinfully employed workers by the reat fields of Industry In which they re engaged, and by which Charles M. chwab and a day laborer in his plant ould be classified together, does not now this; but the Institute organized te data for the 177 villages?ahd for urposes of comparison, the census ata for 38 medium-size cities also? > get at differences in the economic iatus of the people, by ascertaining te number of employers and the numer of employees, the number of clerks, f skilled and of semi-skilled workrs, and of laborers. Fewer Women Work. "The .number of gainfully employed omen in villages was found to be dlsroportlonately small. Among the lales, the relative number of persons ho may be regarded as their own osses, was found to be more than half gain as high In the villages as In the ities, 30.4 per cent as against 18.9 er cent; but for those who are not ieir own bosses the villages have less > offer. "This is shown by their relatively irge number of laborers and servnts;*Sl.5 per cent as compared with t S her cent In the cities: by their is sent on tne nrm irauscuuuueuiw ty. The new line connects with the The letter was the largest ever sent Jo Wonder English Are Grouchy After Breakfast London.?A new dish to break the lonotony of the usual flgh, porridge od bacon and eggs breakfast menu at ist has been found. The recipe has on a prize offered by a London ewspaper. Take a herring and scale and bone , says the recipe. Boll an egg until ard and chop It while hot Into a gratig of cheese. Then add a teaspoon J-I*a Cni.AA<| AV - l_ 11 01 lemou June. u|iiniu uie main Inside the herring, tie the fish bout with a thread, roll it In oatleal and brush all over with beaten EgFry In boiling fat In a frying panasket for five or six minutes and irve hot Boy Eats Bible Moultrie, Ga? Unknown to his parnts, twelve-year-old Mellzo McCoy ate le family Bible with the exception f the two covers and a few pages, he loss was only discovered when [ellzo complained of a stomach acta . . I V *< ' ^ ^ . Jumper Frocks Are "Manteau de j L piCKING out Jumper frocks musl stand somewhere near the neaa oi the list of favorite pastimes with the rank and file of women this season, For sports?and near sports?and foi all daytime wear, they arle (promoting the two-piece vogue In tljifelr summer wardrobes. The two-piece dress has therefore been developed In numberless pretty, Informal varieties and appears even among evening costumes. But for sports and general summer daytime wear It stands at the forefront. There are a good many mediums used for mnklng two-piece dresses, but flannel In white, or high and pastel | *jiv. : |j|f' 9 ?::;>S? u jjgSr For Sports colors. In plain or striped patterns, li the favorite. The plain flannelb used for simple, nnllned coats, and foi severely tailored suits. The coats art sometimes finished with braid orjgros grain ribbon and sometimes with Ice land fox. On white kasha or fl^nne coats, standing collars and ;>atct pockets. In rose or other colored flan nel, are embroidered with whlt^ ah gora wool, and ensembles made up o: white flannel coats and silk f|rocki are among the best of midsummer of ferings. Gay, striped flannels find their] besi mailer proportion of skilled workers, 7.0 per cent as against 23.4 per cent 1 the cities; by the still smaller showlg of Beml-skllled, of whom there are elatlvely only about half as many In tie villages as In the cities, and by le very few clerical workers, 11.7 er cent, while 15.2 per cent of the city orkers are 'white cellar men.' "These occupational differences lndlate that If a man with small capital rants to go Into business for himself e has a better chance of success In tie village; but that If he wants a ood Job as a wage earner, his chances re better In the city. Nevertheless tie villages have many skilled and ami-skilled workers, shpwtng the resence of a surprising number of mnufacturlng plants In these smaller enters, and Indicating that the vlliges of the United States, which are rowing rapidly Instead bf declining, re also sharing to a hitherto unsusected extent In the country's Indusrial development." *ies a Big Letter It ... of ' AC kti&liS it 11 CITY (/ r- fi Se.JSsKAfeis'-fe' i I s?M,vy jl fey X&r 11 lgeles signing his letter to Mayor field In sports clothes and are exjploit ed there in many ways. The daishinf Jumper suit pictured has a skirt of ret _ Two Pari flannel and a jumper In white stjrlped with red, with collar and cuffs cif tht plain flannel. One of the distinctive touches of this season appears- in the band of the striped flannel stitched tc the skirt and finished with red but tons. Navy blue flannel jackets of (man nlsli cut make themselves very; Use ful in the summer wardro&l iwon with white or pastel colored skirts The skirts are nearly always pjaltec with the plaits arranged In groups 01 at one side. The same jackets extend their usefulness when provided | with skirts in navy and white sbepherd'i Black Satin Black satin vies with the newei^materlals and colors, and one Is quite safe In stating that Its vogue equals and In many Instances surpasses the more recent novelties In the fabric world. i Ostrich Feather Fancies Flaring velvet coats- lavishlj I trimmed with fur; and new hats, al though still very simple in llne,( hav? trailing ostrich feather fancies _-V" ** ' ' ^ Popular; Voyage" From Paris [ check, or with a self-color skirt to t crepe?they may be worn everywhere. Somehow "manteau de voyage" seems to convey to the mlud something more pleasurable than our plain English "traveling coat" does? something more than mere travel la i suggested by the graceful French term. One has visions of comfortable journeys and pleasure trips to picturesque places when the conversation Is of manteau de voyage and a hint of elegance Is embodied In these two coats sent over by Lelong and O'Rossen for i our vacation Journeylngs..,- i Lelong has given to the coat at the 1 left the smartest of all smart, stjla and Pastimes i requisites, and that Is appropriateness. ; There Is hardly an emergency of r travel that this coat could not meet s It Is made of a soft wool goods In dark - red and Is fastened with metal buttons. > I If haa lis lines are coo/ auu 51 av.ciu>, *v uuo I an ampie scarf/at the neck and simple 1 but exquisite tailoring In the finishing touches. The O'Rossen coat at tha right la a bit more rugged and a bit I more dashing, with sleeves In the ragi lan style, strap decorations at the - wrist and pockets and bone buttons. It might be developed In tweed or any t plain, soft and substantial wool fab rlc. [ Navy-blue twill Is one of the most 1 satisfactory materials for traveling A L fj] ) is Offerings I coats, very cnic moaeis me ?uui.? s this summer with short detachable ) capes buttoned to the shoulders or i about the neck. Sometimes they are > lined with crepe In high contrasting - color, as cherry, red or chartreuse green. The detachable cape la con yenlent for Journeys that take one to variety of climates. Coats oS i checked materials?as kasha or nov elty tweed?cut on mannish lines and I three-quarter length fit In with al' most every environment/ I JULIA BOTTOMLET. 1 I worn with the smart little one or twopiece sports dresses. \t ' if t : - , /. f ? m s ~? - * 'v 'v. ' *^elj A: * . ... * '*j CHILDREN'S i 1 NURSE RESUMES \ HERDUTIES | Praises Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound "I have taken Lydia E. Plnkham'a -Vegetable Compound for some time and IAa I am a children's nurse, I hare to be on my feet a great deal and your medicine has helped me hardly able to do my housework when I began taking it, and now I am a strong and well woman, and go out nursing besides. I hare also used the Sanatlre Wash and found It beneficial."?Mas. Qibtsudb L. Stsw. ast, 103 Darls St, Greenfield, Mass. ValaabU for WtaknM "I hare found Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a raluable medicine fnr weakness."?Mas. J. A. Putsch, Bo* 397, Lancaster, Pa. Hundreds of letters like these are received by the Plnkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Grateful women from Pennsylvania to Washington, from Texas to Illinois and from Rhode Island to Nebraska say that their health has Improved since taking Lydia E. Pink ham'8 Vegetable Compound. Mother! Teethina Will Help Relieve Baby's Colic ^ Colic Is nna of the most frequent complaints from which babies suffer, It Is caused by Indigestion and often results from careless feeding and over* loading baby's stomach with too much food. Teethina is a safe corrective, relieving colic by gently regulating the little bowels. It soon makes baby quiet and happy again. "My baby was so cross and fretful, I couldn't look after my housework." writes Mrs. J. H. Warblngton, 813 Sunset Ave., Atlanta. Oa. "He was constantly crying and fretting. I gave him Teethina and now he is so different you would hardly know him. He laughs and plays all the time." Teethina Is a famous baby doctor*e prescription tested by .millions of mothers. It Is wortly ifirf weighty Ingold during teething psrkidk Contains no opiates or harmful drugs of any sort. Price 30c per package at all drag stores, . | T7D17X7 f SEND FOR USEFUL J JL AYl^JUt* Bookuyibmt UabUj ] C. J. WOFFTPTCO. COfcUMBUS, OA. ' TEETHINA Builds Better Babies ? V "! - -?1 Plants and Electricity Despite the fact that experiments have been conducted for many years to determine the effect of a current of electricity upofi growlneplunts, there Is still a diversity of Opinion on the subject of the influence of electricity upon plant development. In England, where the electrical treatment has been applied by charging a network placed high enouglfWrbve the growing crops to permit cultivation with homes, Increased yields are reported. Eight years of similar experimental tests by the United States Department of Agriculture have not shown any positive response by plants. Culticura for Pimply Paces. To remove pimples and blackheads ? * ?in. vy?xi smear cnem wnu i^umuta wmimcui. Wash off In five minutes with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. Once clear keep your skin clear by using them for dally toilet purposes. Don't fall to Include Cutlcura Talcum. 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